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Text Appearing Before Image:following the first broad-side was indeed fired. His ship ended up being hulled many times be-tween wind and liquid, five carronades had damaged free, muchof the rigging had been gone, the primary and mizzen-masts were indanger of dropping on the part, and several of their guys had been dis-abled. Perceiving that Cyane had struck. Captain Douglas at-tempted to run, however it was too late. His wheel was shotaway, and his reduced masts have been poorly hurt. After achase of 30 minutes he surrendered, and Lieutenant Ballardwas delivered to take ownership. Lieutenant Hoffman had been onboard the Cyane with a small crew. This fight is noted when it comes to splendid seamanship of theAmericans and gallant behavior regarding the English. CaptainStewart had succeeded, by running and backing from a single shipto others, in fighting each separately, and in stopping hisown ship from being raked. There is nothing finer in ourannals. It was the final great battle associated with the Old Ironsides, because it wasthe final frigate activity associated with war.

Text Appearing After Image:OLD IRONSIDES 8i The success of the War of 1812 can not be credited to onefrigate, yet the Constitution absorbed the greatest number of at-tention as she performed definitely the maximum problems for British armedships upon the sea. Becoming looking for considerable repair works, the old frigate underwenta amount of implemented idleness, lasting about six years, sailingagain in May, 1821, under command of Capt. Jacob Jones forservice as leading of this Mediterranean Squadron. It was dur-ing this cruise, in 1822, that Lord Byron paid the lady a call. When you look at the autumn of 1823, the Constitution had been in Boston for anew staff, sailing in October, 1824, under Capt. Thomas Mac-donough, to join the Mediterranean Squadron, after that immediately to becommanded by Commodore John Rodgers, whose powerful handand rigid control would, the Secretary of this Navy ended up being con-vinced, restore the moral tone and put a conclusion towards the brawlsand battling of duels, also towards the basic dissipation thenrife between the officers regarding the Mediterranean fleet

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Text Appearing Before Image:AN ARAB. The picture illustrates the problem of acquiring foothold inside sand. taken up to Alexandria for fix. The accidentblocked the traffic regarding the Canal for 14 hoursThis had been the greatest success accomplished by theenemy in the endeavours to reduce communica-tions between the Mediterranean and India. Imperial Service Troops had the credit of alittle affair in which the organizer regarding the Canal

Text Appearing After Image:Ti;F<KFSn ANF) f;HF<MAN OFiF(:F-F<S. LHE TIMES fllsrollY OF Hello We! [AI{. IuiiU lodt liici litf. Oil (i t-iiilMU 23 u hqtiHtlionof MyHor« Lttiu-tTrf, ojwrating 15 miles oaist ofKanturu caine upon u foreti of HO to 70 Turks,the ttclvttnce body of u niicliug ptirty 200 strong.The Lancers pursutil the enemy for severalmiles, killing seven, cuptiuing 12, anil woundingmany others. Among the dead the boily ofthe sheikh Ri/alla Salim was identified. At thiw period, the close of 1915, the Turksand (}erman« had been making severe preparationsfor another advance on Egypt. The Alliescampaign in (lallipoli liad failed while the advanceon Bagdad liad converted into a retreat, while theconquest of Serbia because of the Central Powers and indeed expended in (Jermany from the Armyof Egypt and (ierman soldiers had been delivered toConstantinople—though perhaps not four military corps.Few Germans, save officials, reached Syria.Hut German guns, German ammo, and(ierman equipnent oi all kinds arrived in Syria,where in January

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Text Appearing Before Image:ne 28, 1919. Zada Morgan to H. L. Bingham, Aug. 2,1919^ Adah Nicolet to Ralph Robinson Parker,Mar. 28, 1916. Produced.—To Fanny (Aldrich) Beard a son,.Edward Leonard III, Jan. 31, 1918. To Anita (Yereance) Girdwood a son,James Girdwood IV, Nov. 12, 1919. Died.—Ruth (Fisk) Walter in April. Various Other Information.—Harriette Bell features beealibrarian at the McLean Hospital in Waverley,Mass., this cold temperatures. Margaret Evens are at present secretary to-the librarian, Williams university.1918 Class secretary—Mrs. Sidney A. Cook,,care Paul Cook, Troy, N. Y. Our Third Reunion was an excellent success,according to all people who had been fortunateenough for straight back, and there were a hundredand fifty of them. Heppie and Mary Menseldid every little thing in the world to produce 1918 feelthat everything have been given to abeautiful time. It had been a sad misfortune thatour course child, Edith Holmes, cannot bewith us in the end, but we shall desire to have herat our Fifth. See web page 336 for thef ull report. THE SMITH ALUMNAE QUARTERLY 371

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Text Appearing Before Image:me personally andaddress somewhere on little blank. This isvery crucial to make certain that appropriate credit can begiven off to the right people. A CONCEALED GEM A diamond put cucritslcd oer And hidden from community view,It waited very long while friendly fingers Its neighbours from its existence dn .For these people were shining, brilliant and strong. And caught the eye of those whom passed.But diamonds which are crusted oer May be discovered nevertheless eventually. One day an expert passed like that And gazed with wistful eye;lie saw complete numerous brilliant (/ems. However these were kept while he passed by.He looked properly tested really; . it last he discovered just what satisfied him best—// had been the diamond crusted oer. For the :eas chosen mong the rest. Ye souls, whom believe your light is hid And rest unnoticed time by day.The piercing eye of Jesus shall get a hold of Your worth, though clad m miry clay.Well polished, brilliant and beautified. And fitted because of the Masters hand.Your locations in the top youll find To be probably the most sublimely (/rand! —C.W.S. MERRY CHRISTMAS TIME

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Text Appearing Before Image:nt to consider it is one which the engineersclient alone must deal with. The well-being of latteris the success for the former. Nor can he affordto be oblivious to the forbidding proven fact that the opera-tive force, these piping days of governmental nostrums, is,too frequently, in public areas, semi-public or political idea,middle-class viewpoint. The haste with which economicquestions that pertain to anything which is why thepublic should be taxed could be the result generally for this mid-dle-class opinion. Frequently, all too often, such questionsare maybe not corrected or examined by the most useful intelligenceThis middle-class opinion is a slave to words andcatchy phrases, to specious argument, and is an in-strument of utility in the possession of associated with the self-seeking—the follower of this fatal short-cut, and is stampedwith the hall-mark of governmental caprice. It is the mil-dew from the heart of development; because of it happens to be knownto contradict the essential primary details of economicconditions and grandiloquently to oppose all humanexperience.

Text Appearing After Image:Penstocks, Energy Home, Tail-race and Transmission Lines. February 21, 1914.] JOURNAL OF ELECTRICITY, POWER AND GAS 159 P. P. I. E. EXHIBIT AREA TOTALLY FREE. Intending- exhibitors at the Panama-Pacific Inter-national Exposition are going to be a great deal contemplating the an-nouncement made February 20, by President CharlesC. Moore that the installation of exhibits may beginas early as July 1 of this 12 months. This will enable theexhibitors to devote nine months to the preparationof their particular shows and certainly will eliminate the annoyance andexpense brought on by the requirement of haste in prepara-tion and installation. The exposition is making no charge for area toexhibitors. Every energy will be made to help theexhibitor also to decrease the expenditure incidental to ex-hibition. Arrangements were made wherebymanufacturers who require send less than carload lotsmay combine with other exhibitors through an ac-credited exposition agent and obtain the carload lotfreight rate. The exhibit can be sent to a represent-ative of

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Text Appearing Before Image:of Laurel, in preparationfor college. Their freshman work wasdone within the Industrial university of Louisi-ana. Within the fall of 1914, M. G. entered thesophomore class in technical engineer-ing at Mississippi A. and M. College.Here he continued with credit to himselfuntil the United States ended up being drawn intothe war in 1917. M. G. was perhaps one of the most popular young men incollege over these years. He was an active person in several studentorganizations along with a lively curiosity about every period of university ac-tivities. In-may, 1918, he withdrew from college to enter an Officers TrainingCamp. He was utilized in Camp Taylor, Kentucky, where he re-ceived a commission as Second Lieutenant on the go Artillery, U. S. A.He ended up being commissioned on October 15, 1918, and just one week later,he passed away from an attack of influenza, at the home of their moms and dads, atLaurel, Mississippi. Besides their moms and dads, three brothers and four siblings,a host of university pals were left to mourn losing this talentedyoung guy.

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Text Appearing Before Image:n 360 legs (club.). Manufacturing ofquicksilver started right here with an output of 412 fiasks in 1875; and themine is credited with an overall total production up to now of 42,092 flasks, or nearlytwo-thirds of the total output of Sonoma County into the end of 1917. ^See p. 217, i)ost. 188 CALIFORNIA STATE MINING BUREAU. This includes the yield for the Mt. Jackson mine adjoining, as the twowere operated in tandem for several years, and their individ-ual figures are not separable. As noted in a foregoing paragraph,from 1882 to 1894, the truly amazing Eastern mine ended up being the only real quicksilverproducer in Sonoma Count3^ this excellent Eastern-Mt. Jackson lode is particular due to its isola-tion from other practical quicksilver build up and from any knowneruptives. It resembles notably the Culver-Baer ledge with its strong,ochreous outcrop between a serpentine hanging-wall and sandstonefootwall. (viewed at remaining of Photo No. 38.) The attack is north of westand dips north at 50° to 60°, being steeper during the area. The Great

Text Appearing After Image:Photo No. 38. Great Eastern Mine, near Guerneville, Sonoma County. Ledge outcrop atleft; furnaces in center; furnace dump at right. Eastern vertical shaft sunk inside sandstone footwall is down 550,with two winzes of 160 each sunk through the 500 level. There is certainly alsoa 400 drift from the 500 degree. The collar associated with the shaft is approximately 200below top of the outcrop, as well as that level there is a tunnel in 1100,with linking drifts and stopes within the ledge above. From shaftthere are levels at 150, 220, 360 and 500, respectively. The ore shoot is enclosed within the ledge of opalized stone which wasoriginally probably mostly serpentine. Becker^ views that thissilicification preceded the deposition of ore, though somewhat closelyconnected with it. Sporadically only a little pyrite accompanies the cin-nabar. The ledge stuffing is described as numerous cross-fissures,at an appartment position, filled with quartz stringers, like ladder veinsdescribed by Lindgren.- The ore kinds principally in reasonably s

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Text Appearing Before Image:rease in 1920: Mealses i 43 Whooping cough 1 29 Diphtheria 34 36 Meningitis 13 22 Lobar-pneumonia 342 354 Broncho-pneumonia 157 240 Brights diseases 272 276 natural heart problems 2 79 298 Congenital debility and malform. .176 217 conditions reported: Influenza 4,048 9,270 Diphtheria 917 517 Lobar-pneumonia 1,205 1,697 Broncho-pneumonia 924 1,404 Progress in Health Perform.—Towns, metropolitan areas andstates are beginning to realize the cheap-est type 01 medical health insurance can be obtainedfrom well-organized and effectively operatedhealth divisions. The interest in trainedpublic wellness employees has exploded so rapidlythat it now greatly surpasses the offer. Thecall for general public health nurses alone can be so greatthat years must elapse before enoughwomen are trained in the task to supplythe communities now calling when it comes to essentialservice which only a public wellness nursing assistant canfurnish.—Connecticut Wellness Bull. 333 Journal of health Society of New jersey Published onthe First Day of each Month

Text Appearing After Image:In Directionof the Committee on Publication Vol. XVII, No. 10 ORANGE, N. J., OCT.. 1920 Subscription, .00 per YearSingle Copies. 25 Cents ARTHROPLASTY — A SECURE, SANEAND PRACTICAL SURGICALPROCEDURE* By George H. Sexsmith, M.D., F.A.CJ5., Bayonne, N. J. The arthroplastic procedure, especiallyas applied to the big and weight-bearingjoints, such as the leg and hip, is at thepresent amount of time in bad repute, which suchjoints could be effectively reproducedgiving permanent, durable, painless,properly functionating bones, as well as in theknee, that will stand the test of the plumbline, is barely paid. The bad reputeof this particular operation as above re-ferred to is due in a large degree to theimproper choice and planning of aninterposing substance amongst the boneends entering into the synthesis of thereproduced bones. The arthroplastic procedure inside re-production associated with big including smalljoints can be safe, sane and practical anoperation as is usually the one done for un-

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Text Appearing Before Image:a human body and usually eliminate the spe-cialist in name only.—M. Nicoll, Jr., HealthNews. PubUc HeaUh by Radio.—The U. S. PublicHealth provider, December 2 3, inaugurated asemi-weekly cordless wellness bulletin servicethrough the Naval Radio Station, N. S. F.,Naval Air facility, Anacostia, Va. Messagesare sent on Tuesdays at 4.15 P. M., and Fri-days at 9 P. M., Washington time. It’s saidthat any radio station, amateur or professional,which features a telephonic attachment may beable to read these messages. All radio opera-tors are advised that if they have i^articularquestions with respect to health which they wishto ask, they could write to your Surgeon General,U. S. Public Health provider, Washington, d!C, when it comes to attention of broadcast Service, givingname of operator and contact signal of the sta-tion, and their particular questions would be answered byradio phone by the end of each pub-lic wellness radio message. 63 Journal of The Medical community of New Jersey Published onthe first-day of each and every thirty days

Text Appearing After-image:Under the Directionof the Committee on Publicatioo Vol. XIX, Number 3 LIME, N. J., MARCH, 1922 HAY-FEVER AND ITS PARTICULAR TREATMENTWITH GLYCEROLATED POL-LEN ANTIGEN.* By Ralph Oakley Clock, M.D., Pearl River, N. Y. health article authors regarding the sixteenth, sev-enteenth and eighteenth hundreds of years men-tioned the presence of a specific form ofcatarrh of this mucous membranes whichwas correlated on flowering duration ofplants, nevertheless the recognition and establish-ment of hay-fever as a genuine clinical entitymust be credited to Bostock which in 1819described it as an illness with definitesymptomatology and regular occur-rence. The initial definite connection be-tween the pollen of grasses and hay-fever ended up being acknowledged by Elliotson- in1830; although medical globe is indebtedto Dunbar^ when it comes to exhaustive scientificproof in 19Q3 of this specific activity ofpollen whilst the reason for hay-fever. Dunbar assumed your energetic sub-stances associated with the pollens had been real toxins,but later on investigations established thefact the energetic

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Text Appearing Before Image:l as the utmost cautious administration to carry the expenditureswithin the limits of our resources. Though these problems have been pronouncedso your school has actually felt it self hampered at each change, yet the perspective is farbrighter than this has ever before experienced earlier years. Our stringency has-been re-lieved because of the yearly appropriation from State of 00, guaranteed through theefforts of our staunch buddy, Mr. Ralph Blum. This amount, together -with theappropriation of 00 through the Federation of Jewish Charities of Philadelphia,and our other types of earnings, bring us to the end of your fiscal year entirelyfree from financial obligation, with a property value into the credit regarding the National Farm Schoolof most likely ,000. The next graduation associated with the school occurred on Summer 26. The graduationclass contained six users, every one of whom had finished the recommended course kW^ ■ P^S- ^^k / • Hello 1 FUHffiH H r^^^H 1^ ! /•c-:J 1 IffiHHRI -i^ —T ail-. – -^^^^WlWHiii f ^ ZADOK M. EISNER CHEMICAL LABORATORY.

Text Appearing After-image:Grafting when you look at the krauskopf Memorial greenhouse. 13 with credit to by themselves, and also to the organization which graduated them. In thepresence of a big and representative concourse of friends, the baccalaureateoration had been delivered by the Hon. Charles Emory Smith, whoever masterly address,as really because the ready details by the Rev. Dr. William Rosenau, of Baltimore,and Mr. James L. Branson, of Langhorn, will here simply be pointed out, inasmuchas they truly are to-be posted entirely in our annual report. The students of the final course instantly found jobs for them-selves, and generally are currently vieing with those that had been finished last year in thesuccess obtained. This is certainly without a doubt a practical test of our work, and it can be said,,without the slightest anxiety about contradiction, that had we delivered forth ten times thenumber of students, there wouldn’t normally have already been the least trouble in finding-acceptable opportunities for all of them. I would like but quote as evidence of this declaration,an excerpt from a letter, compiled by

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